back to article UK.gov slaps £100m on broadband investment pile for urbanites

The government will take £100m from the £5bn national infrastructure investment pot over the course of this Parliament in a move to speed up broadband networks in selected urban areas. Rural areas, meanwhile, have been passed over. George Osborne announced the extra cash that the likes of BT and Virgin Media will be able to …

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  1. Anonymous Coward
    Unhappy

    The Cities pretty much pay for themselves, no need to bung backhanders to very profitable businesses.

    But still, that's the goverment way.

  2. dpGoose
    Thumb Down

    I would be happy if I got 2Mbs in my village. I want to strike tomorrow because of this.

  3. AndrueC Silver badge
    Thumb Down

    This seems a rather silly idea. Urban areas are plenty well enough served already - or will be under existing plans by BT. Mind you £100m wouldn't have gone far in the rural 'hinterland' anyway. So basically just another government sop to try and look like they are doing something useful.

  4. Alex-TheManfromUncle
    Mushroom

    Kelly "The Red" Fiveash does it again..

    ""Large swathes of the countryside will be able to access super-fast broadband as BT continues its roll-out and as funds already lined up by the government become available in the next five years or so," it said."

    ...Sort of goes against the tag line, Kelly...!!

  5. John A Blackley

    If my math is correct

    then one hundred million in the government 'pot', minus what gets 'lost' in Whitehall, minus what gets paid to 'facilitators', minus what gets paid to lawyers, minus the profit margin for the operator, minus the bungs to local landowners means Mrs. Chevely of 12 Fortune Close, Belfast can expect to receive a new dongle.

    Sometime in the next five years.

  6. Juan Inamillion
    WTF?

    Joined up thinking

    So all the major cities are complaining about traffic congestion and the need to reduce car use.

    But public transport infrastructure is groaning at the increase in the numbers of commuters, so much so that rail and bus companies are raising their fares to 'regulate' users.

    So increased connectedness is going to put UK.PLC at the forefront of the interweb revolution.

    But rural areas, where a lot of people live (or would like to because it's way cheaper and a better way of life), are still going to be cut off from this revolution because of a lack of investment in broadband infrastructure.

    Have I missed something?

    Of course I haven't mentioned the dirty word - 'profits'...

  7. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    >Rural areas, meanwhile, have been passed over.

    Of course they have. Nobody gives a crap about rural areas. :<

  8. Alan Edwards
    WTF?

    Totally the wrong priority

    That's right, speed up broadband in cities, where they already have FTTC, FTTP and fibre-optic cable TV, instead of putting broadband in where there is currently none.

    One of the guys here wants to work from home, but can't. DSL struggles to a meg on a good day, and he barely gets 2G mobile let alone 3G. He's looking at satellite, but it's still a bit expensive, the monthly limits are low and the uplink speed is crap.

    And they are spending £100 million putting better broadband in where they have already got 20 meg-plus.

    Thanks guys. NOT.

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